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Donald Trump declined to attend the national APIA town hall where Kamala Harris spoke. |
In the hours before election day, Kamala Harris was campaigning all over Pennsylvania while her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is doing the same in Michigan.
According to the polls, Harris and Donald Trump are in a virtual tie lending weight to every vote being cast by a divided nation.
In an unprecedented outreach to the Asian American communities, Vice President Harris outlined her vision for a New Way Forward in op-eds published by major Chinese, Filipino, Korean, South Asian, and Vietnamese American news outlets.
Harris' message is repeated in the periodicals: “There is so much at stake in this election, and Americans are ready to turn the page on the chaos of the past.," she writes. "You deserve a leader who not only sees you, but stands with you.”
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This past week, Harris penned a series of op-eds outlining how her vision for a New Way Forward will deliver for Asian American communities. In the op-eds, Harris underscores the enormous stakes of this election for Asian American voters on key priorities like financial freedom, health care, and safety – and contrasts her plan to build an Opportunity Economy with the dangers of a second Trump term.
To reach this broad coalition of diverse voters where they are, Vice President Harris’ op-eds were published by five major news outlets that serve Chinese, Filipino, Korean, South Asian, and Vietnamese American communities, including the World Journal, Asian Journal, Yonhap News Agency, The Juggernaut, and Việt Báo Daily News.
In her message to Filipino Americans, she touched on the long history between the US and the Philippines and the economic, cultural and military ties and commitments between the two nations.
"Filipino Americans are also at the heart of our healthcare system. I will protect the Affordable Care Act, which has reduced the uninsured rate among Asian Americans to record lows. President Biden and I worked to lower the price of prescription drugs and cap the cost of insulin at $35 for seniors, and I will go further to reduce costs for all Americans," she wrote.
"My plan will also strengthen Medicare to cover home care for seniors, easing the financial and emotional burden many Filipino Americans face when caring for their elders. I took care of my mother when she was sick with cancer—I know that caregiving is about dignity."
"During Filipino American History Month, we honor the ways Filipinos and Filipino Americans have helped bring our nation closer to fulfilling the promise of America," she wrote while reminding readers to vote on Nov. 5.
The op-eds, tailored for each community, are part of the historic investments by Team Harris-Walz to engage with and mobilize Asian Americans, who make up the nation’s fastest-growing voting bloc and are poised to play a pivotal role in this election.
In the final stretch of the presidential race, Team Harris-Walz launched waves of English and in-language mailers and fact sheets; print, radio, television, and digital ads; and hosted in-person events across every battleground state aimed at these critical voters.
For Asian Americans, Harris, Walz and other Democratic stalwarts like Sen. Tammy Baldwin, former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama, met with Filipinos in Nevada, Sikhs in Michigan, Hindus in North Carolina, South Asians in Georgia, Hmong in Minnesota and took time to celebrate Diwali.
FYI: Read the op-eds below:
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